Imagine slipping on a stylish, lightweight device that replaces your smartphone, lets you interact with digital layers over the real world, and feels more like jewelry than tech. That’s the radical promise of Loop, a new wearable XR device launched by Dopple, the brainchild of Etsy co-founder Rob Kalin. And no, it’s not another clunky VR headset—it’s a sleek pin you wear on your chest.
This marks one of the most ambitious entries into the wearable XR market, blending fashion, AI, and spatial computing in ways that challenge the very notion of what “extended reality” means.
Founded in 2023, Dopple is Kalin’s latest venture after stepping away from Etsy. His vision? An ambient computing device that goes far beyond headsets. Loop is designed to clip onto your clothing and seamlessly interact with a spatial OS—a new computing layer that understands your environment, context, and behavior.
Loop isn’t trying to compete with the Meta Quest 3 or Apple Vision Pro directly. Instead, it sidesteps head-mounted displays altogether, focusing on audiovisual assistance, context-aware prompts, and subtle human-computer interaction.
Think of it as a hybrid between Humane AI Pin and the Rabbit R1—only Dopple aims to offer far more spatial intelligence and a robust, voice-driven OS.
Image courtesy Dopple Works
Why It Matters
The XR industry has long battled issues like bulkiness, social acceptance, and real-world practicality. Loop may solve these by:
Eliminating face gear: It’s wearable, not wearable-in-your-face.
Providing always-on awareness: With cameras and sensors, Loop captures your surroundings and enables real-time contextual interaction.
Pushing AI boundaries: With a large-language-model interface, it promises to be your assistant, communicator, and creative aid in one.
In a world where XR devices are mostly still “gamer-first,” Dopple aims to be “everyone-first.” If successful, this could radically redefine the XR landscape.
Dopple is currently in closed beta, and while Loop’s release date isn’t public, Kalin’s team is hiring and inviting collaborators. Developers and designers eager to explore this next-gen form factor can sign up at dopple.ai to join the movement.
This isn’t just another device—it’s an entirely new take on human-computer interaction. If Dopple succeeds, we might not be reaching for our phones in five years—we’ll be wearing our OS like a pin.
Image courtesy Dopple Works
What’s Next & How to Get Involved
Dopple is currently in closed beta, and while Loop’s release date isn’t public, Kalin’s team is hiring and inviting collaborators. Developers and designers eager to explore this next-gen form factor can sign up at dopple.ai to join the movement.
This isn’t just another device—it’s an entirely new take on human-computer interaction. If Dopple succeeds, we might not be reaching for our phones in five years—we’ll be wearing our OS like a pin.